1st Edition

The Approach to Metaphysics

By E. W. F. Tomlin Copyright 1947
    290 Pages
    by Routledge

    290 Pages
    by Routledge

    Originally published in 1947. This book looks at contemporary conundrums in philosophical tendencies, bringing the reader a first-principles review of the purpose of such enquiries in relation to modern life. It presents the importance of the history of the development of philosophical thought, beginning in Part 1 with perception. Significant definitions and theories are identified and later refinements discussed – in particular conceptualism and its development from the Greeks through Berkeley to modern realism and its limitations and critiques. Part 2 brings problems identified by past thinkersto the fore, from Plato’s forms to Christian theology, in an examination of the apparent dichotomy between metaphysics and scientific methods. Part 3 examines the Rationalist and the Empiricist attacks on Scepticism and Kant’s reconciliation of the differences of both. This provides the context and structure for discussion of the works of Hegel, and ultimate refutation thereof as a confusion between metaphysics and theology. Part 4 identifies the developments in thinking of Positivism, both Modern and Logical, and the New Synthesis of Alexander and Whitehead as the most recent approach.

    Preface. Introduction Part 1: The Approach to Metaphysics Through the Theory of Perception 1. The Object of Our Thinking 2. Foundations of a Theory of Perception 3. The Limitations of Perception Part 2: The Nature of Metaphysical Thought 4. Metaphysics and Civilisation 5. The Origins of European Civilization Part 3: The Metaphysical Background of Modern Thought 6. The Rationalist Attack on Scepticism 7. The Empiricist Attack on Scepticism and Kant’s Answer 8. Kant and the Problem of the Thing-in-Itself 9. Hegel and the Rise of the Historical Consciousness Part 4: The Present Situation. Conclusion

    Biography

    E. W. F. Tomlin